Okay, great, we're at 8 am Pacific Time, 11 am Eastern time. So we will kick it off. Good morning everyone. I'm Matt Foehr, CEO of OmniAb, and I want to thank you all for joining our first Research and Technology Event. We are presenting today from NASDAQ's Entrepreneurial Center, in Downtown San Francisco, which is just a short drive across the Bay Bridge from our headquarters and labs over in Emeryville. It's been just over a year since OmniAb became an independent publicly traded company listed on the NASDAQ Exchange. And I want to thank the NASDAQ team here in San Francisco and back in New York, but especially the team here in San Francisco for hosting us today and furnishing this great space for our event this morning. But before I begin, I'd like to remind you that we'll be making forward-looking statements during our presentations. These forward-looking statements, of course, carry risks and uncertainties and actual results may be different from those that are projected. So I'd urge investors to please consult today's earnings release as well as our SEC filings for more information on these risks. So again, welcome. I'm going to provide some opening remarks this morning, some updates on the business and also give a bit of a roadmap to today's presentations. But before I do, I wanted to introduce you to our presenters. We've got a wider cross-section of management. I'm excited that investors and analysts get the chance to meet more of our management and leadership team here. So you'll see presentations from Todd Pettingill, who is our VP of Business Development and Strategy. Todd's been with the OmniAb business really since the beginning of forming the foundation of what has now become OmniAb. He played a critical role in all six of the acquisitions of the company and technology acquisitions that we did in the less than the six year period to form what is now the foundation of the business of OmniAb. Bill Harriman, heads our antibody discovery. Bill was a Founder of Crystal Bioscience, which was the innovator and inventor of OmniChicken. Bill's had a really illustrious career in the antibody discovery space, is also the inventor of the GEM Assay, which is a part of our technology. And Bill has the honors of doing the OmnidAb launch today, and you'll hear more about that as I run through the agenda. Bob Chen runs our Discovery Systems. Bob joined us when we acquired xCella Biosciences. Bob was the Co-Founder of xCella. He Co-Founded it along with Dr. Jennifer Cochran, who also sits on our Board of Directors. The xCella business was spun out of the Stanford School of Engineering, and Bob is an inventor of our exploration technology, which has become a key part of our business as well. And you'll also get to meet Doug Krafte. Doug is a well-known individual in the scientific circles around ion channels and transporters. He has a long history of first scientific -- first around the ion channel and transporter space and heads our Ion Channel AND Transporter Team based out in Durham. And then you'll also get to meet Kurt. Obviously, many of the investors on the line and analysts know Kurt very well. Kurt joined us not long before the split, when we split the business off and became an independent publicly traded company. A long career in biotech and technology, longest of which was at Amgen for many years, heading their European finance operations. So excited that you'll get a chance to meet all of these colleagues who I'm honored to work with today. Today's agenda, again, I'll provide some opening remarks. Todd is going to give an update on creating value for partners. That's something obviously is very important to us. And Bill will be launching the OmnidAb technology today. We'll talk a lot about that, get into the science, get into where it fits in the industry and why it's important. Bob will highlight how we enhance discovery with OmniDeep, which is our suite of in silico tools that are woven throughout our technology stack. And Bob will provide details there and provide some case studies and other details that we think will be interesting to the investment community. And then Doug will talk about the Ion Channel opportunity, some high-value partnerships that we have there and why we see unlocking the antibody potential in ion channels as an important part of the future. And then Kurt will review our financials. Obviously, we reported our Q3 financials earlier this morning. He'll review those and also provide some other financial insights into our portfolio of partnerships in our business. But I'm going to start with our mission. We are a mission-driven organization. This is what guides us. This is what keeps us focused. And our mission is to enable the rapid development of innovative therapeutics by pushing the frontiers of drug discovery technologies. We are highly focused on this. We're highly committed to this. And I think that clarity of mission is one of the things that attracts new partners and also causes a number of our existing partners to expand their use of our platform. Our business, in many ways, is quite simple. It's a licensing business. So we license our technologies to the industry to allow them to more quickly and efficiently discover antibody-based therapeutics. Our technology offering addresses some of the most critical needs in discovery today. And we're operating one of the largest Greenfields in the pharma industry. I'll talk more about that in a couple of slides, but the antibody element, an antibody-related therapy elements of the industry continue to grow. We have a leading and proven technology now with a growing number of partners and a growing number of programs, and we are committed to continued innovation in what we call intelligent expansion of our technology. Because of where we sit in the industry, we have a bit of a unique position where we can have deep technical dialogue with our partners, not only understanding where they are today, but where they are headed and that informs how we invest in and how we innovate around our platform. So a little bit on OmniAb today. We, as I said at the outset, we just passed the one-year mark of being an independent publicly traded company. And we really do feel like all of the pieces in the business are beginning to become aligned. As we look forward into 2024 and beyond, we do feel like we really have a business that is positioned to sing, if you will, going forward, that the pieces have come into place. And we really do now feel like we have a business that's positioned to sing. Our work is centered on driving the business, on accelerating innovation around the platform and consistently staying ahead of our partners' discovery needs. We are 112 employees across three primary U.S. sites. Our headquarters here in the San Francisco Bay Area, over in Emeryville. We have an ion channel and transporter team in Durham, North Carolina, as I mentioned. And then also an in silico team that's based in Tucson, Arizona. And that we've also built up our business development team more broadly, and recently established ex-U.S. business development presence as well. We see the need for only minimal future headcount growth to support substantial growth in our portfolio and our partnerships. There's a lot of leverage in this business, a lot of efficiency that's been built in over time, and we feel like we're really well positioned to take advantage of that leverage. Despite a macro landscape in the pharma tools and technology space that has obviously been widely reported and has had a number of headwinds associated with it, our business metrics in our business continue to demonstrate the value that our platform brings to the industry. We've had nice growth in new partners, nice growth in new programs over the last 24 months, while the industry has been facing substantial headwinds. We've also seen nice partner program advancement and announced this morning that we now have five new clinical entrants in this calendar year 2023. Our work and our technologies are really having an important impact, not only on our partners' R&D pipelines but also on patients' lives. This is something that really motivates us. It motivates the rigor that we put into the science, how we challenge ourselves to stay ahead of partners' needs. But we're quite proud of the fact of where we sit in the industry, and it's quite rewarding to see the impacts we're starting to have on patients' lives. There are over 170 active or completed clinical trials that are testing OmniAb-derived therapeutics. That's a testament not only to our partners' commitment and conviction around the antibodies that have been discovered out of our technology, but it also speaks a lot about the impact that we can potentially have on patients' lives. There are over 30,000 subjects either enrolled or to be enrolled in those trials. We have three approved OmniAb-derived drugs. All of those are in cancer currently and a growing portfolio of clinical programs that I'll touch on a little bit later in this section. Our business is really designed and funded for continued innovation and intelligent technology expansion. We're obviously launching an exciting new technology today, our OmnidAb heavy-chain OmniChicken. And importantly, our innovation engine for either producing new transgenic animals or new elements of our technology is becoming more and more efficient. We're able to do it faster. We're able to do it more cost effectively. And that's something that I think will feed well -- to feed the business well into the future. We will launch other novel technologies next year as well, and we also expect to roll out other new partner experience enhancements as we call them, in 2024 and beyond. So I'm going to step back for a moment and talk a little bit about the antibody market. This is a growing market for a variety of reasons. The antibodies are projected to have sales of $279 billion by 2025, up from $238 billion last year. There were 51 blockbuster antibodies. So these are antibodies with sales of over $1 billion in 2022. And the five best-selling antibodies had approximately $75 billion of sales last year. The importance of discovery technology focused on antibodies continues to increase for a variety of reasons. There have been decades of foundational and basic biology research and scientific advancement that are helping create what I see as a continuing need for cutting-edge antibody-related discovery technologies. A lot of foundational investment that is driving that present day and future demand, really starting all the way back with Nixon's war on cancer back in the 1970s. And then a number of other scientific advancements that contributed to antibodies becoming a more and more important modality for treating disease. Those include hybridoma, the cloning, obviously, the human genome project and the advent of proteomics as well as other advancements in immunology and a deeper understanding of immunology, molecular biology and higher and higher-speed computing, all of which drive that demand for discovery technology. In addition to that, the industry success rates, the success rates that our industry, the pharmaceutical industry has enjoyed over recent years have been far higher for antibodies than traditional small molecule pills that you may put in your mouth. Overall, the historical success rates for antibodies have been roughly double that for small molecules when you compare it over the fullness of time. There are also other factors that are driving interest in antibodies, the Inflation Reduction Act, which is shifting R&D spending of large pharma partners away from small molecules is also driving interest in antibodies. And then the data on the right-hand side, in the blue of this slide is actually very new data. This was just presented a couple of weeks ago by the Antibody Society, who do a very meticulous tracking of antibody success rates for antibodies that are being pursued in a therapeutic way by commercial sponsors. So we find this data, one, extremely relevant and also very interesting given what it's showing. And if you look at it very closely, the way the Antibody Society does is, is they're tracking these on an individual basis. And you see in the bar charts moving left to right, and there are overlapping periods here because of the way in which they report the data, and the way in which they track the data. But you can see over time that it appears that the industry is also getting better at developing antibody-based therapeutics. So not only have the historical success rates had been better than small molecules, other macro factors driving investment away from small molecules to antibody-based modalities, but the industry is also getting better at developing antibody-based medicines. So I'm going to talk a little bit about some recent metrics in the business. We've signed eight new license agreements so far this year. We announced new platform agreements with GigaMune and Polaris Therapeutics that were both signed in Q3 and more recently entered into a new platform license agreement with a global pharma company, a well-established global pharma company that was also signed recently. So our active partner count has grown to 76 as of the end of the quarter. And as you can see in the bar chart, we've continued to grow the number of active partners net of attrition over a number of cycles in the biotech space. We also think there's strength and diversity in the types of partners that we are attracting and bringing in, and that creates multiple paths to potential value creation downstream. We've also seen nice growth and advancement of active programs. We started this year with 291 active programs and we ended Q3 with 314 active programs, net of attrition. So you can see that growth reflected on the left-hand side, in the bar chart. And then on the pie chart on the right, you see that we've had nice growth in diversity as well as graduation and advancement, if you will, of programs. So we've had a number of programs move from discovery to preclinical. We've had five programs moved from preclinical to Phase I clinical trials and one program moved from a Phase III to its first international filing. I want to note here as well that our definition of preclinical is something of a high hurdle. We don't put something in that preclinical slice of the pie chart, unless it is in pre-IND studies and the partner is moving towards filing an IND and entering into clinical trials. So that's quite a high bar that we use in defining preclinical. But as you see, there are 14 programs in that slice. We've also had growth in active clinical programs. We started off 2023, indicating our expectation publicly that we expected three to five new clinical starts this year. And at the end of Q3, we are at five. So we've had five new clinical programs from -- of OmniAb-derived antibodies entered the clinic this year. Seagen had a bispecific. Immunovant entered the clinic with IMVT-1402, which is a next-generation FcRn antagonist. They've also already reported out positive data for that program, and indicated this morning, they expect more data for that program before the end of this month. Gloria entered into its first clinical trial for an anti-LAG-3. And then in the third quarter, Roche entered into the clinic with a bispecific antibody. And Cessation Therapeutics entered into clinical trials with an antibody with a very interesting and important medical use as an anti-fentanyl. Obviously, fentanyl, a lot of reporting of the medical tragedy and growth in medical need around preventing fentanyl overdose. And this is a really interesting use of an antibody, and that's an issue not only here in the United States, as has been widely reported, but also now becoming more of an issue in other countries as well. I do want to note here on the Roche program, which entered the clinic in Q3. That is a program that is subject of a fully paid license that was essentially a grandfathered license that we inherited from a company that we acquired. So there are no economics to that program. So I want to be clear about that. But it is a further validation of the importance of our technology in a variety of disease spaces. We continue to monitor the progress of the 14 preclinical stage programs as those approach Phase I clinical trials. As I mentioned on the prior slide, we have a very high hurdle for what we call preclinical. These are programs that are in pre-IND studies that are approaching the clinic. This next slide is becoming a bit of an eye chart. As more and more things enter the clinic, we are now at 31 programs that are either in clinical trials, in registration or approved. This is becoming harder and harder to read on a slide. We are considering other ways to reflect our pipeline to investors in the outside world, bulls eye charts and the like, which may be more amenable to showing not only the diversity of partners, the growing diversity of therapy areas as we get deeper into the pipeline, but also the progression as well. And importantly now, as I kind of wrap up my section here, we're announcing today that we are launching OmnidAb. And in fact, we've already launched it. We have partners now that are already leveraging this newest technology of ours in active programs. OmnidAb put simply is the first and only transgenic chicken that is producing single-domain antibodies. And this is a growing important class and one that creates a lot of interesting opportunities, not only medically and scientifically but for the business as well. And Bill is going to talk more about that, and Todd will also talk about partner perspectives around OmnidAb as well. And as I wrap up here, I just want to talk a little bit about our key areas of focus going forward. We believe we are well positioned for future growth. And we believe we are making an enduring and significant impact on human health and on the industry as a whole. We feel like as we enter 2024, as I said, the business, the pieces are aligning for the business and we feel like it's positioned to sing, and we are leveraging a highly scalable business where investments in technology and innovation really are informed by deep discovery relationships with our partners. We have quite -- I'll use a non-scientific word and say quite intimate relationships with our partners around not only the challenges that they're facing today and the types of antibodies and antibody-based modalities that they want to pursue, but also the challenges that they're facing tomorrow. We're focused on partner pipeline development and expansion, continued what we call workflow versatility initiatives, expanding the reach of our platform as well as new technology development and launches. At our foundation is a focus on stakeholders. That's a really important part of our foundation. I'm quite proud of the team that we have, fantastic colleagues to work with. We have a strong culture. We really do focus on developing, hiring and motivating the best employees. We focus all the time on our partners, making sure we're focused on customer service, we're focused on future needs and that deep collaborative scientific dialogue that they're looking for. And of course, you investors, as well. That's obviously superior. Business execution is extremely important to us, and we'll continue to be committed to that going forward. And then we're also committed to leading with integrity and responsibility in the communities in which we operate. So with that, I'm going to introduce Todd who just a little bit ago got back from BIO-Europe. He's looking fresh and ready to go. So Todd, welcome. Thanks.